Anatoly Yakovenko, CEO of Solana Labs, said on Saturday that Solana must keep evolving through continuous updates to meet developer and user needs, warning it will die if it stops changing, as he stated. “Solana needs to never stop iterating. It shouldn’t depend on any single group or individual to do so, but if it ever stops changing to fit the needs of its devs and users, it will die,” he wrote.
Vitalik Buterin has argued a different path for Ethereum, saying the network should reach a state that passes the “walkaway test” and remain self-sustaining without active developer intervention. He frames that goal as essential for long-term resilience and minimal external influence.
The two chains differ in focus and use cases. Ethereum emphasizes decentralization and tokenization of real-world assets, while Solana emphasizes speed and popular consumer applications, and it often collects higher fees.
Supporters of Buterin caution that frequent feature additions raise risks of bugs, security flaws, and unintended centralization. Backers of Yakovenko counter that a hands-off stance can slow innovation and let faster chains overtake developers.
Yakovenko said protocol changes should come from many contributors and could use network fees to fund AI-assisted development. “You should always count on there being a next version of Solana,” he added.
Buterin noted Ethereum still needs work before it can be left alone, citing the need for quantum-resistant features, a more scalable architecture, and a block-building model that resists centralization pressures.

